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Dakar 2017 Update: KTM Factory Racing

06 January 2017

BITTERSWEET DAY FOR RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING TEAM AT DAKAR 2017

On Thursday riders left Argentina on another brutal ride of 521 km. The fourth stage of The Dakar took the riders across the Bolivian border from Jujuy to Tupiza, with the timed section comprising 416km with the additional challenge of tackling dunes at an altitude of around 3,500 meters. Like many others, Sam Sunderland lost valuable time in the early part of the timed special before they made the crossing from Argentina into southern Bolivia. He went on to finish the stage in 12th place, 16.18 minutes off the lead.

-Red Bull KTM Factory Racing Mechanics Tent-

Toby Price

Toby Price, who won the second stage but then lost time at the beginning of Wednesday’s Stage 3 after a navigational error, had been working hard to catch Barreda. He had just got in front of him when he crashed in a riverbed at the 371 km mark. The medical team reported he had fractured the thighbone in his left leg when he was only a few kilometers from Tupiza in southern Bolivia, where the stage finished. The factory team later confirmed Price was being transported to the capital La Paz for further treatment.

-Toby Price-

Matthias Walkner

Matthias Walkner: “Actually at the beginning of the stage I didn’t feel so good and I got a bit lost, like everybody, I think, because it was tricky navigation. After I had a good speed but I didn’t think it would be enough to win.” Speaking of his teammate’s accident, Walkner commented: “I got to him about five minutes after the crash and Adrien Van Beveren and Paulo Goncalves had already stopped. I saw he was awake and they told me he was more or less okay, so I kept on going. Where he crashed it was in a riverbed, where the ground changed very quickly. First it was sandy and you could go flat out at 140 km/h, but then you came to some big stones and it’s very hard to find the right speed. If you hit a stone with the motorbike then its difficult.” Looking ahead to Friday’s fifth stage, the Austrian rider said in some ways it would be good to start first but it would also be a difficult job to open the piste.

-Matthias Walkner-

Sam Sunderland

Sunderland was disappointed to have lost time at the beginning of the stage: “It is really frustrating because I’m trying to spend a lot of time on the notes, but it’s very unclear. I can only speak for myself but I heard other riders are also having problems. Even some of the car teams who have a guy just for the navigation are having difficulties. I guess the organizers want to make it like this. It’s frustrating because I felt good and strong the rest of the day but its pretty rough to lose 10-15 minutes at the start of the day and for sure its going to get worse.” Speaking of his injured teammate, Sunderland said: “I also want to shout out to my buddy Toby Price and hope he can get better soon. It is a big blow for KTM but we are a good team and a strong one and we’ll keep fighting until the last day.”

-Sam Sunderland-

Laia Sanz

The day was also a frustrating one for KTM factory rider Laia Sanz who finished at 36th in the stage. “I was doing well at the beginning and I was navigating well. I was on the traces and in the right place for the waypoint, but I stopped to confirm with another rider, and he told me that I was wrong. So I went back to check, and I was right the first time, so I lost half an hour.”

-Laia Sanz-

Friday’s Stage 5 will continue north on the Bolivian Altiplano. Riders can expect a vast range of terrain and organizers say the stage will be one of the most demanding. There will be two challenging dune sectors in the final kilometers of the 447 km timed special and they will ride for a total of 692 km to get to the stop at Oruro. After this long day, they only have one more stage before the one rest day in La Paz.